Amiibo-related Tips were added as part of this. This version finally implements online data sharing between players, and adds Amiibo support for the New 3DS.
This patch was released on February 9, 2015.
(Source: Nintendo and SmashWiki) Version 1.0.5
This is relatively hard to experience due to the specifics of how to make it work. The reverse is likely, though unproven, to occur. However, an international release can hear the Japanese vocals if a replay on the Replay Channel is playing Ashley's Song on the WarioWare stage with Player 1 having a Japanese game. This contrasts with the Wii U version and Brawl, which included both versions of the song regardless of region.
Incidentally, beating this particular challenge provides the player with a message of "Achieved a score of 1000 in Home-Run Contest", which was probably missed because it lacks the "m". Since all internal data remains in metric, several challenges have unusual-looking requirements, such as "Hit Sandbag 3280 feet" (1000m).
Kirby has different voice clips when he copies Palutena and Shulk's neutral special moves to accommodate for the new translations, a rarity in the series as they usually go untranslated.Trophy descriptions display significant differences on the whole, even between different English releases.Lucina's name is pronounced differently between Japanese and international releases, using a hard C for the former and a soft C for the latter. Untranslated titles either mean the same thing as the English title, or are self-explanatory. But the Portuguese and Spanish languages actually give these titles interesting names! For most of the European languages, this title is short of interesting, just a word explaining bluntly what the loadout is mostly about. When choosing your equipment, a subtitle appears under your stat distribution pie chart. Since his All-Star Trophy is meant to represent an alternate color scheme, the two regions have their colors reversed.Ĭheck the titles in the US and Japanese versions of the game, and transcribe the Russian titles. Other icons, such as his Sound Test icon, remain unchanged. His Trophies and costume orders have also been changed accordingly.
In Brawl, his Famicom palette was the default in all regions. Like his appearance in Mario Kart DS, R.O.B.'s default color scheme changes based on the region of the game: his Famicom colors in Japan, and his NES colors in North America.